急性化学事故监测-危险物质紧急事件监测,九个州,1999-2008。

Q1 Medicine MMWR supplements Pub Date : 2015-04-10
Maureen F Orr, Jennifer Wu, Sue L Sloop
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引用次数: 0

摘要

问题/状况:虽然不经常发生,但急性化学事件(即持续的危险物质不受控制或非法释放或威胁释放)报告期间:1999-2008年。系统描述:1991年1月至2009年9月期间,有毒物质和疾病登记局(ATSDR)运行了有害物质紧急事件监测系统,以描述化学品释放对公共卫生的影响,并制定旨在减少危害的活动。本报告提供了HSEES的历史概况,并总结了过去10年(1999-2008)数据收集期间参与HSEES的9个州(科罗拉多州、爱荷华州、明尼苏达州、纽约州、北卡罗来纳州、俄勒冈州、德克萨斯州、华盛顿州和威斯康星州)的事件。结果:1999-2008年共发生化学品事故57975起,其中固定设施事故41993起(72%),运输事故15981起(28%)。化学制造业(NAICS 325)(23%)是发生事故最多的行业;但是,随着时间的推移,化学制造业的化学事故数量大幅减少(R²= 0.78),而教育服务类别(R²= 0.65)和作物生产类别(R²= 0.61)的化学事故数量持续增加。最常见的事故原因是设备故障(n = 22,535,占事故总数的48%)和人为错误(n = 16,534,占事故总数的36%)。最常释放的化学物质是氨3366(6%)。几乎60%的事故发生在德克萨斯州和纽约州。德克萨斯州、威斯康辛州和科罗拉多州的事件数量呈下降趋势,而明尼苏达州的事件数量呈上升趋势。解释:尽管化学品制造占hsee事故的最大比例,但随着意识的提高和预防措施的实施,该行业的化学品事故数量随着时间的推移大幅减少。然而,教育服务和作物生产环境中的事件有所增加。事件的趋势和数量因州而异。只有少数化学品、部门和领域被发现与大多数事件和受伤人员有关。设备故障和人为错误都是常见的偶然因素,是可以预防的。公共卫生影响:本监测摘要收集的结果强调了教育机构和公众需要接受更有针对性的外展。此外,导致大量事故的少数化学品和工业可以成为预防活动的重点。这些监控摘要中的数据表明,设备维护以及防止人为错误的培训可以减轻许多事故;NTSIP已开始在这些领域开展工作。国家监督允许一个国家确定其问题领域、工业和化学品,以进行预防和准备。从2010年开始,ATSDR用国家有毒物质事故计划(NTSIP)取代了HSEES,以扩大HSEES的工作。NTSIP帮助各州收集监测数据,并促进具有成本效益的主动措施,例如转向本质上更安全的设计,开发化学易损区域的地理地图,以及采用绿色化学原则(设计化学产品和工艺以减少或消除有害物质的产生)。由于纽约州和得克萨斯州等人口较多的州发生的事故最多,因此应仔细评估人口密度高的地区,以便采取准备和预防措施。NTSIP为不收集数据的州开发估计的事故数字,以帮助州和国家规划。NTSIP还收集了造成大量伤亡的化学品事故的更详细数据。HSEES和NTSIP数据可用于公共和环境健康与安全从业人员、工人代表、应急规划人员、准备协调员、行业、应急响应人员和其他人员,以准备和预防化学品事故和伤害。
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Acute chemical incidents surveillance—Hazardous Substances Emergency Events Surveillance, nine states, 1999-2008.

Problem/condition: Although they are infrequent, acute chemical incidents (i.e., uncontrolled or illegal release or threatened release of hazardous substances lasting <72 hours) with mass casualties or extraordinary levels of damage or disruption severely affecting the population, infrastructure, environment, and economy occur, and thousands of less damaging chemical incidents occur annually. Surveillance data enable public health and safety professionals to better understand the patterns and causes of these incidents, which can improve prevention efforts and preparation for future incidents.

Reporting period: 1999-2008.

Description of system: The Hazardous Substances Emergency Events Surveillance (HSEES) system was operated by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) during January 1991-September 2009 to describe the public health consequences of chemical releases and to develop activities aimed at reducing the harm. This report provides a historical overview of HSEES and summarizes incidents from the nine states (Colorado, Iowa, Minnesota, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Texas, Washington, and Wisconsin) that participated in HSEES during its last 10 full years of data collection (1999-2008).

Results: During 1999-2008, a total of 57,975 chemical incidents occurred: 41,993 (72%) occurred at fixed facilities, and 15,981 (28%) were transportation related. Chemical manufacturing (NAICS 325) (23%) was the industry with the most incidents; however, the number of chemical incidents in chemical manufacturing decreased substantially over time (R² = 0.78), whereas the educational services category (R² = 0.65) and crop production category (R² = 0.61) had a consistently increasing trend. The most common contributing factors for an incident were equipment failure (n = 22,535, 48% of incidents) and human error (n = 16,534, 36%). The most frequently released chemical was ammonia 3,366 (6%). Almost 60% of all incidents occurred in two states, Texas and New York. A decreasing trend occurred in the number of incidents in Texas, Wisconsin, and Colorado, and an increasing trend occurred in Minnesota.

Interpretation: Although chemical manufacturing accounted for the largest percentage of incidents in HSEES, the number of chemical incidents over time decreased substantially for this industry while heightened awareness and prevention measures were being implemented. However, incidents in educational services and crop production settings increased. Trends in incidents and number of incidents varied by state. Only a certain few chemicals, sectors, and areas were found to be related to the majority of incidents and injured persons. Equipment failure and human error, both common casual factors, are preventable. PUBLIC HEALTH IMPLICATIONS: The findings in this collection of surveillance summaries underscore the need for educational institutions and the general public to receive more focused outreach. In addition, the select few chemicals and industries that result in numerous incidents can be the focus of prevention activities. The data in these surveillance summaries show that equipment maintenance, as well as training to prevent human error, could alleviate many of the incidents; NTSIP has begun work in these areas. State surveillance allows a state to identify its problem areas and industries and chemicals for prevention and preparedness. Beginning in 2010, ATSDR replaced HSEES with the National Toxic Substance Incidents Program (NTSIP) to expand on the work of HSEES. NTSIP helps states to collect surveillance data and to promote cost-effective, proactive measures such as converting to an inherently safer design, developing geographic mapping of chemically vulnerable areas, and adopting the principles of green chemistry (design of chemical products and processes that reduce or eliminate the generation of hazardous substances). Because the more populous states such as New York and Texas had the most incidents, areas with high population density should be carefully assessed for preparedness and prevention measures. NTSIP develops estimated incident numbers for states that do not collect data to help with state and national planning. NTSIP also collects more detailed data on chemical incidents with mass casualties. HSEES and NTSIP data can be used by public and environmental health and safety practitioners, worker representatives, emergency planners, preparedness coordinators, industries, emergency responders, and others to prepare for and prevent chemical incidents and injuries.

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MMWR supplements
MMWR supplements Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
48.60
自引率
0.00%
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8
期刊介绍: The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR ) series is prepared by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Often called “the voice of CDC,” the MMWR series is the agency’s primary vehicle for scientific publication of timely, reliable, authoritative, accurate, objective, and useful public health information and recommendations. MMWR readership predominantly consists of physicians, nurses, public health practitioners, epidemiologists and other scientists, researchers, educators, and laboratorians.
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